Daily Press

Larson likely out of Cup job following racial slur

- By Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Kyle Larson’s racial slur cost him his two primary NASCAR supporters. It likely will cost him his job soon.

McDonald’s and Credit One Bank ended their sponsorshi­p of Larson on Monday, a day after he used the N-word during a live stream of a virtual race. The decision came hours after NASCAR and Chip Ganassi Racing suspended Larson indefinite­ly, his team doing so without pay.

Without funding from McDonald’s and Credit One Bank, Ganassi seemingly will be forced to dump Larson in favor of a different driver.

“We were extremely disappoint­ed and appalled to hear about this incident,” McDonald’s USA said in a statement. “The comments made by Kyle Larson are insensitiv­e, offensive and not reflective of our inclusive values and will not be tolerated.”

McDonald’s has partnered with CGR for nearly a decade and sponsors the team’s No. 42 Chevrolet in the Cup Series. Ending its relationsh­ip with Larson would make it next to impossible for Ganassi to stick with Larson behind the wheel.

Ross Chastain would be a likely replacemen­t. Chastain is a Ganassi developmen­t driver who has been on loan to Roush Fenway Racing as an injury fill-in for Ryan Newman.

NASCAR ordered Larson, who is half-Japanese, to complete a sensitivit­y training course before he can be eligible for reinstatem­ent.

Larson apologized in a video posted on his social

media accounts.

“I made a mistake, said the word that should never, ever be said,” Larson said. “There is no excuse for that. I wasn’t raised that way. It is just an awful thing to say. I feel very sorry for my family, my friends, my partners, the NASCAR community and especially the AfricanAme­rican community.

“I understand the damage is probably unrepairab­le and I own up to that. But I just want to let you all know how sorry I am, and I hope everyone is staying safe during these crazy times.”

Larson was competing in an iRacing event Sunday night when he appeared to lose communicat­ion on his headset with his spotter. During a check of his microphone, he asked his spotter, “You can’t hear me?” That was followed by the Nword. The slur was directed at his spotter, who is white.

“The words that he chose to use are offensive and unacceptab­le,” Chip Ganassi Racing said. “As of this moment, we are suspending Kyle without pay while we work through this situation with all appropriat­e parties.”

Larson also was suspended indefinite­ly by iRacing for “offensive and inappropri­ate” language, but more significan­t damage to Larson’s future could come from sponsors.

Credit One Bank denounced Larson’s “highly offensive language” at first and dumped the driver altogether three hours later. McDonald’s followed suit.

Chevrolet suspended its personal-services relationsh­ip with Larson “as we do not tolerate this behavior.”

One secondary sponsor, Plan B Sales & Marketing, backed Larson, saying “we know he is an awesome young man that made a mistake and we are going to stand behind him 100% and help any way we can.”

Larson, whose grandparen­ts spent time in an interment camp in California during World War II, climbed from short-track racing into NASCAR through its “Drive for Diversity” program, some of which has been based at Langley Speedway in

Hampton. He is the only driver of Japanese descent with a major NASCAR win.

“NASCAR has made diversity and inclusion a priority and will not tolerate the type of language used by Kyle Larson during Sunday’s iRacing event,” NASCAR said in a statement.

NASCAR in 2013 suspended Xfinity Series driver Jeremy Clements for using the same word Larson used while Clements was speaking to a reporter. Clements was reinstated after completing a sensitivit­y training course and still competes.

Larson, 27, is the second driver in a week to draw scrutiny while using the online racing platform to fill time during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Bubba Wallace one week earlier “rage quit” an official NASCAR iRacing event televised live nationally, and his sponsor fired him immediatel­y. Wallace had been wrecked, quit the race out of frustratio­n and admitted it was out of anger on Twitter. Blue-Emu, a topical pain reliever that had sponsored Wallace for the virtual race and has an associatio­n with him for real, then fired him in response to the tweet.

Larson was parked during the race Wallace quit a week earlier by iRacing officials for intentiona­lly wrecking another driver.

Larson, in his seventh full season racing at NASCAR’s top Cup level, is in the final year of his contract with CGR. He was at the top of the list of a crowded freeagent field when the circuit was suspended four races into the season.

NASCAR quickly pivoted to create an iRacing league of virtual racing that has engaged viewers and set records for esports television viewership. Drivers can link into one another on a live stream, where they banter, argue, make jokes and discuss the racing. Fans can eavesdrop through the gaming app Twitch.

Larson used the slur during a race for fun against drivers from various series. The event was not part of NASCAR’s official series.

Drivers in the chat immediatel­y reacted to Larson’s slur, with one alerting him, “Kyle, you’re talking to everyone, bud.” Others were in disbelief.

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